1. Introduction
In March 2020, the SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) pandemic was declared by the World Health Organization (WHO). Worldwide, regulations limiting the coronavirus spread impacted individuals’ mental distress and family strain [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10]. In particular, families with dependent children were adversely affected by struggles imposed by public health measures (e.g., school/childcare closure) [
11,
12], often straining family relationships [
6,
7,
8,
10]. Understanding these adverse family experiences is vital as society addresses COVID-19-related family challenges and moves forward to recovery from the consequences of the pandemic.
Family strain is variably defined to include quality of parenting, child abuse potential, caregiver burden and parenting distress [
8,
12,
13]. The COVID-19 pandemic influenced overall family relationships, particularly caregiver strain, relationship strain and parenting-related conflicts. In a Canadian sample of 570 caregivers (97.9% mothers), over 75% reported moderate-to-high levels of caregiver strain during the pandemic [
7]. In another Canadian study, 37.2% of 568 participants (predominantly mothers) experienced relationship distress [
8]. Parents also reported increased parental psychological distress and parenting irritability, decreased family positive expressiveness, conflict with children and parenting-related exhaustion [
6,
14,
15]. On the other hand, some parents reported that stay-at-home orders during the COVID-19 pandemic enhanced their relationship with children [
14,
16].
The COVID-19 pandemic had a widespread influence on parental and child mental health. In Western countries, parents and caregivers reported that their mental health and children’s behaviors had been negatively impacted since the pandemic [
1,
5,
14,
17,
18,
19]. Compared to pre-pandemic data, the rates of depression and anxiety in mothers of children across all ages increased during the COVID-19 pandemic [
1]. Parents also experienced negative changes in mood and stress, potentially impacting parent–child relationships [
12]. Furthermore, caregivers reported increased behavioral issues (e.g., tantrums, crying, sleep changes and decreased child talking) in their children [
20]. Younger parental age, financial stress, previous parental and child physical and mental health conditions and COVID-19-related stressors contributed to more family strain during the pandemic than pre-pandemic data [
6]. Caregivers with younger children, compared to those with older children, reported an increased level of mental distress and more family strain [
6,
7,
21]. Furthermore, the significant association between parental anxiety and depression symptoms and parental stress during the pandemic was also exhibited [
12]. COVID-19-related stressors and maternal mental distress were associated with higher child abuse potential, caregiver burden, low quality of parenting and parenting distress [
8,
12,
13]. The pre-pandemic and COVID-19 literature suggested sociodemographic factors (e.g., household income and parental employment status) potentially confounding the link between family members’ mental health and family relationships [
22,
23,
24,
25].
Research examining family strain during the pandemic has often been limited to examining relationships between parent–partners or parent–child relationships rather than a more comprehensive definition examining relationships between different types of family members (e.g., siblings and adult partners with children). Further, to our knowledge, specific associations between mothers’ and children’s mental distress and family strain outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic have not been described. Lastly, there is a lack of longitudinal evidence examining this specific link between mothers’ and children’s mental distress and family strain in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. The contribution of longitudinal evidence is pertinent in understanding individual differences associated with various psychosocial risk factors [
26].
The current prospective cohort study addressed the evidence gaps with novel approaches, using a more comprehensive definition of family strain, examining the particular associations between mothers’ and children’s mental distress and family strain in COVID-19 and employing longitudinal evidence. In this study, we sought to determine whether (1) mothers’ mental distress (i.e., depression, anxiety and perceived stress) increased the odds of family strain during the COVID-19 pandemic and (2) children’s mental distress (i.e., emotional, behavioral and social distress) increased the odds of family strain during the COVID-19 pandemic. We hypothesized that mothers’ and children’s mental distress would be associated with increased odds of experiencing family strain.
4. Discussion
This prospective cohort study examined associations between mothers’ and children’s mental distress trajectory classes and family strain during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study findings demonstrated a significant association between mothers’ mental distress trajectory class and the odds of experiencing family strain over the follow-up period, but not between child mental distress and family strain. This study highlights that when mothers struggle with higher levels of distress, regardless of whether it is due to depression, anxiety or stress, households are more likely to experience family strain. We found that more mentally distressed mothers experienced more significant family strain over time, suggesting this association as a potentially chronic problem.
The current study found a significant association between maternal mental distress and increased odds of experiencing family strain during the COVID-19 pandemic, which was consistent with the pre-pandemic literature. Before the pandemic, the family burden was related to personal mental health problems of family members [
39]. Another study demonstrated that caregiver burden was associated with caregivers’ psychological distress; however, family functioning did not influence caregiver strain or psychological distress separately [
40]. The current study using data during the COVID-19 pandemic found no statistically significant association between child mental distress and family strain. There are inconsistencies in the pre-pandemic literature examining this specific relationship. Children’s mental health was associated with parental stress but not parental involvement with their child [
41]. Also, a reciprocal relationship was examined between parental relationship quality and children’s externalizing and internalizing problems [
42]. Aligning with the current study findings, a recent Chinese study examined the associations between youth mental health, parental mental health distress and family relationships during the COVID-19 outbreak and found that parent–child and marital relationships are associated with parental mental health [
43]. However, Bai et al. (2022) used a sample of families with children aged from 10 to 18. In contrast, the current study focused on families with children aged from 7 to 11 years due to the relevancy of pre-pandemic evidence that a younger age contributed to more-strained family relationships [
6]. Given the current study finding aligning with the pre-pandemic literature, we speculate the long-term ramifications on family strain to be linked with mothers’ and children’s mental health distress beyond the pandemic context. Thus, continued attention should be given to supporting the impacted families.
To our knowledge, this is the first North American study to examine the association between mothers’ and children’s mental distress and family strain during the COVID-19 pandemic. Past studies have examined only parental strains or proxies of family strains (e.g., quality of parenting, child abuse potential, caregiver burden and parenting distress) in association with maternal mental health and child distress in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic [
8,
12,
13,
44] and have ignored children’s contributions to family strain (or its converse higher family functioning). A recent European study found that decreases in parental strain were associated with decreases in child problem behaviors and increases in child well-being during the pandemic [
44], which differs from the specific relationships examined in this current study, where we did not find a significant relationship between child mental distress and family strain. This study used a comprehensive definition of family strain; family strain was examined across different types of family members in a household (i.e., adult partners, child siblings and adult partners with kid[s]). This aggregated definition is a novel approach; it suggests that a higher level of maternal mental health distress is associated with mothers’ strained relationships with other family members and their relationships with each other. Thus, this finding suggests a broader implication for considering all family members when tailoring support to improve family relationships impacted by maternal mental health distress.
The limitations of this study include potential selection biases in the sample. The current study lacked variability in SES variables (i.e., maternal education, marital status and household income). We used a composite SES score to address these variables’ lack of variability. Also, the study sample was skewed towards high SES values (e.g., sociodemographic variable score average = 2.71; range 0 to 3). As the literature suggests that a higher SES value has protective effects on family strain and mental health in parents and children, we speculate that the current finding underestimates the true relationship [
45,
46,
47,
48,
49]. Due to the nature of self-reported data, this study may also be susceptible to recall bias, leading to potential misclassification of the exposure and outcome variables. Furthermore, even though this study examined the associations between maternal and child mental distress and family strain at different time points, we cannot infer a causality of the relationship in this observational study.